Seducing Smugglers: The Spanish Empire’s Incentives for a Legitimate Transimperial Slave Trade, 1640s- 1670s
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García Montón, AlejandroFecha
2024-11-22Patrocinador
Research project: “Orígenes institucionales del extractivismo material en América Latina” [PPJIA], funded by the Universidad de Granada (Spain); Research project: "HISFIMED. La Monarquía Hispánica, la circulación de los metales preciosos y la globalización financiera en el Mediterráneo 1568–1798, [pid2021-124500na-100]”, funded by the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (MCIN) and the Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI)Resumen
This article offers new insight into the relationship between formal trade and contraband in the mid-17th century Caribbean in the light of the asiento slave trade. It disentangles the circumstances in which merchants chose their preferred channels to conduct business and explores why they made these decisions. By analyzing the early contracts between Dutch and English slave traders with the firm of Grillo and Lomellino to service the asiento slave trade to Spanish America (1663–1674), this article examines the incentives and motivations that merchants—sometimes experienced smugglers—had for participating in the official trade. This is especially significant if we take into consideration that international slave suppliers were not coerced into entering the asiento trade by other parties. Instead, they were attracted by a more advantageous business model which reduced uncertainty and increased predictability.





